Robert Rimmer

Robert Henry Rimmer (March 14, 1917 August 1, 2001) was an American writer who authored several books, most notably The Harrad Experiment, which was made into a film in 1973.

Robert Rimmer
BornRobert Henry Rimmer
(1917-03-14)March 14, 1917
Boston, Massachusetts
DiedAugust 1, 2001(2001-08-01) (aged 84)
Quincy, Massachusetts
OccupationWriter
Alma materBates College
GenreNon-fiction

The recurring theme in all or almost all of Rimmer's writing was a criticism of the assumption of monogamy as a societal norm. They explore various ways of organizing life, through laws or other means, to facilitate non-monogamous relationships.

Biography

Robert Henry Rimmer was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on March 14, 1917, to Francis "Frank" Henry Rimmer, a printing company owner, and Blanche Rosealma, née Rochefort, Rimmer in Boston, Massachusetts. A. Frank Rimmer, determined to be successful in business, had a series of sales positions including selling vacuum cleaners, then typewriters, door to door, before securing a loan to open his own printing firm in 1916. With the support of business partner, George Duffy, Frank Rimmer formed the Relief Printing Corporation soon after Robert's birth, "relief" meaning raised print on business cards and stationery. Robert Rimmer stated, "Little did I know as a growing fetus in Blanche's womb that twenty-nine years later Relief Printing Corporation would own me, and FH, as I began to call him ("Dad" seemed inappropriate when I was finally in business with him), would be subtly controlling my life."[1]:283

His relationship with his father, especially, and his mother are reflected in some of his works, such as the novel The Rebellion of Yale Marrat. Rimmer stated, "I transformed portions of my realities into fiction. Pat Marrat, for example, is a fleshier, cigar-smoking version of FH. The conflict between Matt Godwin and his father in The Immoral Reverend has many similarities."[1]:285 Rimmer has stated that his greatest influences came from reading books, since this was the only real available entertainment in his developmental years, especially reading of his heroes such as Benjamin Franklin and the "Bound to Rise" heroes of Horatio Alger, as well as Hans Christian Andersen, Mark Twain, and the unexpurgated Arabian Nights. He graduated from Bates College with a multi-disciplinary degree in English, Psychology and Philosophy and later obtained an MBA from Harvard. He served in World War II. When his enlistment was up, he returned to the US and took a position in the family printing business. 25 years passed before he wrote his first novel.

Rimmer died in Quincy, Massachusetts, on August 1, 2001.

Bibliography

  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1962). That Girl from Boston. Challenge Press.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1964). The Rebellion of Yale Marratt. Challenge Press.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1966). The Harrad Experiment. Sherbourne Press.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1967). The Zolotov Affair. Sherbourne Press.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1968). Proposition 31. New American Library.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1971). The Harrad Letters to Robert H. Rimmer. Signet. ISBN 0451040376.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1972). Thursday, My Love. Dutton Adult. ISBN 0453003575.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1973). Adventures in Loving. Signet. ISBN 0451056051.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1975). The Premar Experiments. Crown Publishers. ISBN 0517521482.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1977). Come Live My Life. New American Library.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1978). Love Me Tomorrow. Signet. ISBN 0451083857.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1980). The Love Explosion. Signet. ISBN 0451095197.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1982). The Byrdwhistle Option. Prometheus Books. ISBN 0879751843.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1986). The X-Rated Videotape Guide (2nd ed.). Harmony. ISBN 0517560585.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1995). Let's Really Make Love: Sex, the Family, and Education in the Twenty-First Century. Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-0879759643.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (1998). Dreamer of Dreams: Wondering—A New Religion Challenges Christianity. iUniverse. ISBN 978-1583481042.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (2000). Me and Samuel's Wife: An Analytical Story. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0595088508.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (2000). The Lov-Ed Solution. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-59509-702-9.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (2000). The Trade Off: My Husband/Your Wife. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0595009534.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (2000). The Way to Go. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0595095506.
  • Rimmer, Robert H. (2001). Here We Are Again. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0595191178.

Movie adaptions

Rimmer's novel The Harrad Experiment was made into a film in 1973, and That Girl from Boston was adapted in 1975.

gollark: I was looking at the WHATWG's documentation on application/x-www-form-urlencoded and it says this:> The application/x-www-form-urlencoded format is in many ways an aberrant monstrosity, the result of many years of implementation accidents and compromises leading to a set of requirements necessary for interoperability, but in no way representing good design practices.
gollark: I feel like they could probably just, if it's for array literals, get away with limiting it to 16 or so with no major issues.
gollark: It's allegedly to make neater bytecode.
gollark: This code is a TOTAL apiohazard.
gollark: Maybe some sort of abstract interface for them which is implemented by the class.

References

  1. Mark Zedrozny, ed. (1991). Robert H. Rimmer. Contemporary Authors: Autobiography Series. 10. Gale / Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0-8103-4509-6.
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